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DOI: 10.1177/0921374006071617 Rehearsals of The SovereignStates of Exception and Threat GovernmentalityBridgewater College, Virginia, USA The attacks of 9/11 have been generally viewed as a traumatic, historical rupture, ushering in the war on terror as well as a warfare/security state in the US. Yet close attention to police practices on urban streets suggests that the actions of the state in this context are not without precedent. This article links apparently divergent situations in order to track the persistence of a rationality of government, which I call threat governmentality. Concerned with security and the management of risk, and fi xating on racialized bodies, threat governmentality comprises repressive violence on the part of police and civilians, and public discourse after the fact of such violence, in which the relative criminality of the victimsand hence the relative value of their livesis debated. Rather than a post9/11 invention, I argue that this rationality represents what Agamben called the nomos of the political space in which we live.
Key Words: governmentality police race security urban
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